logo
Archaeologists discover ‘large cat' bite marks on Roman gladiator skeleton for first time

Archaeologists discover ‘large cat' bite marks on Roman gladiator skeleton for first time

News.com.au26-04-2025

Bite marks discovered on an ancient Roman skeleton in the UK have been hailed as the first ever physical evidence of gladiators fighting large cats like lions and tigers in public games.
The skeleton was one of 82 excavated in a 2004 dig at the Driffield Terrace cemetery in York, one of the only known Roman-era burial grounds thought to have been used for gladiatorial combatants.
A team of researchers from led by Professor Tim Thompson, a forensic expert from Maynooth University in Ireland, investigated 'unusual lesions' on the pelvis of one skeleton, a man estimated to have been aged between 26 and 35.
The researchers compared the size and shape of the bite marks using samples from large cats at London Zoo.
They concluded the injuries were consistent with those from a lion — likely not from a direct attack but by 'scavenging' shortly after the unfortunate gladiator was decapitated, 'either to put him out of his misery at the point of death, or for the sake of conforming to customary practice'.
The findings, published in the Journal of Science and Medical Research PLoS One this week, represent the 'first physical evidence for human-animal gladiatorial combat from the Roman period seen anywhere in Europe'.
'The spectacle of Roman gladiatorial combat captures the public imagination and elicits significant scholarly interest,' the authors wrote.
'Skeletal evidence associated with gladiatorial combat is rare, with most evidence deriving from written or visual sources.'
The individual in question, dubbed 6DT19, was one of three adults found buried in the same box and overlaid with horse bones.
Malin Holst, a senior lecturer in Osteoarchaeology at the University of York, told the BBC the man's remains revealed the story of a 'short and somewhat brutal life'.
David Jennings, chief executive of York Archaeology, told the broadcaster, 'We may never know what brought this man to the arena where we believe he may have been fighting for the entertainment of others, but it is remarkable that the first osteoarchaeological evidence for this kind of gladiatorial combat has been found so far from the Colosseum of Rome, which would have been the classical world's Wembley Stadium of combat.'
York, in northern England, was founded as a Roman legionary outpost in 71AD and later served as the provincial capital from the early third century, with occasional visits from the emperor himself.
Most large Roman cities, particularly those that hosted important dignitaries and wealthy nobles, would feature an arena for staging gladiatorial combat for public entertainment as a display of wealth.
Although the York amphitheatre has not yet been found, the researchers say the bodies exhumed from Driffield Terrace lend credence to the theory that the city would have staged fighting games. Almost all of the remains were men aged 18 to 45, many with significant injuries including fractured teeth, skulls, thumbs and vertebrae — signs 'strongly associated with interpersonal violence'.
'Overall, the osteological evidence provides us with a picture of young or middle aged men, originating from across the Roman Empire, engaging in repetitive and sustained acts of violence,' they wrote.
Roman 'beast hunts' (venationes), which pitched people against wild animals like lions, tigers, leopards, bears and even elephants, have been extensively documented in texts, mosaics, inscriptions and sculptures — and depicted in films like Gladiator.
'Animals were used, too, as the agents of spectacular mutilation and execution of criminals, captives from warfare and other perceived deviants, including Christians, who were also sometimes forced to participate in such events, known as ' damnatio ad bestias ',' they wrote.
However, the 'nature and scale of person-animal combat in Roman Britain is contested'.
'While images survive of such confrontations, there has been no published evidence to date which provides direct testimony of such events taking place in the province.'
The researchers noted the logistical challenge of transporting lions from North Africa to Roman Britain would have come at significant cost.
'It has been argued that emperors were almost as concerned with the supply of sufficient animals to populate venationes and other spectacles as they were for ensuring the availability of staple foodstuffs, with concomitant investment in infrastructure to sustain that supply,' they wrote.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Age of Dead Sea Scrolls pushed back by new AI study
Age of Dead Sea Scrolls pushed back by new AI study

ABC News

time4 days ago

  • ABC News

Age of Dead Sea Scrolls pushed back by new AI study

The Dead Sea Scrolls are one of the most significant troves of religious manuscripts ever found, with many being the oldest surviving copies of biblical texts. First found by a Bedouin shepherd, the hundreds of ancient scrolls — excavated from the Qumran caves, in the West Bank, between 1946 and 1956 — have been a boon to those studying the history of Judaism and Christianity. But while we know the scrolls are all between 2,500 and 1,800 years old, just a fraction have dates written on them indicating when they were first composed. Figuring out the ages of the other scrolls can help scholars to understand how Judaism evolved, and which scripts and ideas were important at different times. Now an international team of researchers has aimed to fill some gaps in the Dead Sea Scrolls' timeline using a combination of artificial intelligence (AI), carbon dating and handwriting analysis. In the journal PLOS One, they proposed new ages for more than 100 scroll fragments, and found many to be older than previously thought. Gareth Wearne, a researcher in biblical studies and the history of ancient Israel at Australian Catholic University, said the research could change our understanding of the history of the Dead Sea Scrolls. "It potentially has implications for how we think about how the material came to be copied and disseminated at the beginning of the process that ultimately led to them being included in the biblical canon," Dr Wearne, who was not involved with the study, said. Radiocarbon dating is often relied on in archaeology to find the age of an artefact, and the Dead Sea Scrolls are no exception. But the technique is vulnerable to contamination, and often yields imprecise results, particularly for the period when the Dead Sea Scrolls were written: there are fewer artefacts with known dates to calibrate the scrolls' age against. Plus, as University of Groningen archaeologist and study lead author Mladen Popović pointed out, "radiocarbon dating is a destructive method". Researchers now only need a few thousandths of a gram of material to carbon-date it, but artefacts with the cultural importance of the Dead Sea Scrolls are incredibly precious. Another common technique used to study the scrolls is palaeography, or the study of handwriting, which looks at the way scripts have changed over centuries. But this method is also vulnerable to inaccuracies. So researchers such as Professor Popović and his colleagues have looked for ways to date the scrolls when other methods fall short. In their new study, the team carbon dated 24 Dead Sea Scroll samples. The researchers fed digital images of the 24 dated scrolls into a machine learning model — a type of AI — which was designed to analyse the handwriting in the scrolls. They then had the AI predict the ages of 135 other scrolls, based on their handwriting and scripts. The researchers named their AI model Enoch, after a figure depicted in the book of Genesis who they deemed a "science hero". Enoch's predictions, and the carbon dated samples, found many of the scrolls were older than previously thought — sometimes by decades, sometimes by a few years. The study suggested two of the Dead Sea Scrolls may be texts contemporary to when they were first written, or close to it. One scroll, which contains a fragment from the book of Daniel, was carbon dated to between 230 and 160 BC — up to 100 years older than previous estimates. This means it overlaps with when the text was believed to be written, based on historical events it refers to. Another scroll, containing text from Ecclesiastes, was dated with the Enoch AI to the third century BC. The text had previously thought to have been created roughly in the mid-second century BC based on how it aligned with the cultural movements of the era. If the dating is correct, these two fragments would be the first-known examples of biblical texts from the time when the work was composed. Expert palaeographers checked the AI's results, and found 79 per cent of them to be realistic predictions. Dr Wearne said the findings were "the single greatest step forward since the development of the original, conventional dating system" in the 1940s. "It then requires us to think about the social and the historical context in which the scrolls were produced in new ways." Andrea Jalandoni, an archaeologist at Griffith University who wasn't involved with the research, said the addition of other techniques strengthened the reliability of the AI. "They've pinned it with radiocarbon and then evaluated it with expert palaeographers," Dr Jalandoni said. But, she said, the AI model was trained on a small sample size, which could complicate its reliability. Professor Popović plans to apply the Enoch model to more Dead Sea Scrolls, as well as other ancient Aramaic texts like the Elephantine Papyri. "The techniques and methods we developed are applicable to other handwritten [collections of text]," he said. Dr Jalandoni, who studies rock art in Australia and South-East Asia, said the study gave her ideas for her own research. "I was looking at this and thinking: 'Wow, I wonder if I can do this with rock art,'" Dr Jalandoni said. "We have some dates for rock art, but not a lot." Australian rock art has very little carbon in it, making carbon dating a fruitless task so archaeologists have to rely on other dating methods. "If we could … create a machine learning model that can predict dates that line up with more methods, I think it's the way to go," Dr Jalandoni said.

Aussies stunned by ‘fireball' meteor
Aussies stunned by ‘fireball' meteor

Perth Now

time12-05-2025

  • Perth Now

Aussies stunned by ‘fireball' meteor

Residents in Western Australia have been stunned by a 'fireball' meteor that lit up the skies. The bright fireball passed through the skies about 6am on Sunday over the Central Wheatbelt, producing a brilliant yellow flash and a trail of bright green. Witnesses were able to catch a glimpse of the early-morning meteor from Perth to the Goldfields, however, experts are yet to determine where it eventually landed. Residents in Western Australia have been stunned as a meteor lit up the skies on Sunday morning. Supplied Credit: Supplied The Perth Observatory said the astronomical sight was 'most likely an iron meteor' which had been 'orbiting within the inner Solar System'. 'To shine that brightly, the fireball — technically known as a bolide — would have been about the size of a cricket ball to a basketball,' the observatory said online. The 'fireball' meteor left a green trail in its wake Supplied Credit: Supplied According to Perth Observatory's Matthew Woods, the meteor would have been travelling between 16 to 60km per second, leaving behind a trail of green as the built-up friction melted. He told 9News it was 'one hell of a meteor'. 'That was very nice … little surprise for Mother's Day,' he said. Some thought the light was the moon. Supplied Credit: Supplied The meteor was spotted across much of the state. Supplied Credit: Supplied Online, witnesses were dumbfounded by the 'spectacular' sight, with some believing it was an aeroplane. 'Never seen anything like it,' one person wrote. 'Thought someone was driving at us with high beams on at first,' said another, who watched it pass overhead from Newdegate. A resident from Mt Magnet said they initially thought the 'huge and burning bright orange-red' light was 'the moon until it moved'. The meteor created a bright orange and red light. Supplied Credit: Supplied Some thought the meteor was the Kosmos 482, a Soviet-era spacecraft that plunged back to earth more than 50 years after its failed launch to Venus. However, Curtin University astrophysicist Steven Tingay told the ABC it was unlikely the fallen spacecraft, which likely landed over the Indian Ocean on Saturday, though European and US agencies are yet to confirm its exact location.

Soviet spacecraft plunges to Earth after 50 years stuck in space
Soviet spacecraft plunges to Earth after 50 years stuck in space

Sydney Morning Herald

time11-05-2025

  • Sydney Morning Herald

Soviet spacecraft plunges to Earth after 50 years stuck in space

A Cold War-era spacecraft has come crashing down to Earth after being stuck in orbit for more than five decades. An unconfirmed report from Russian space agency Roscosmos claimed that the Kosmos 482 splashed down in the Indian Ocean, west of Jakarta. Experts from around the globe had been monitoring Kosmos 482, but its eccentric orbit, coupled with space weather, made its potential landing site difficult to predict. In an update on its Telegram channel, Roscosmos said: 'The descent of the spacecraft was monitored by the automated warning system for hazardous situations in near-Earth space. 'According to calculations by specialists from TsNIIMash [part of Roscosmos], the spacecraft entered the dense layers of the atmosphere at 9.24 Moscow time, 560 kilometres west of Middle Andaman Island, and fell into the Indian Ocean west of Jakarta. 'The spacecraft was launched in the spring of 1972 to study Venus, but due to a malfunction of the booster block, it remained in a high elliptical orbit of the Earth, gradually approaching the planet.' Both the EU Space Surveillance and Tracking Operations Centres and the US Space Command have been monitoring the probe after it suffered a rocket malfunction and ended up trapped in orbit around Earth for 53 years. The European Space Agency (ESA) space debris office had calculated that the craft would 'come down at a point between 52 degrees north and 52 degrees south of the equator'.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store